Hi Snowdrops
Carrots, parsnips, turnips, spring onions, kohlrabi, rhubarb and salad potatoes (not tried those before as opposed to normal earlies and maincrop). A more extensive range of beans, and another try at peas, though they don't seem to do very well on our site or so we've been told. Our first experience last year bore this out, but my rather variable watering may have had something to do with that. May try bleeder hoses to help with that. Also to plant out some soft fruit bushes.
At present we have first and second early and maincrop spuds in, 62 garlic plants, 40 shallots with more to come, 300 onions about to go in, with a variety of brassicas and some courgettes, sweetcorn and squashes to come. We've cornered the market in those rapid root trainers from Haxnix which open like a book, and are good for about six years if you're careful with them. Very easy to open them and slide the young plants out to go into open ground.
I have some autumn/winter carrots which went in a bit late last year and never got thinned out, owing to a health problem which raised its head. They're still there, and a test showed thin but otherwise reasonably developed roots. Nothing to lose, so I'm going to transplant them into some waist high trugs to see how they do over the spring and summer. Not their natural growing season, but you never know.
Infrastructure-wise, we shall shortly have a fully-fenced and gated plot to keep those wretched deer out, wood-waste paths, and will be putting up a freecycled greenhouse with built in staging and a large polytunnel frame which cost me £40 second hand. It will be covered with fruit cage mesh to house the fruit bushes and some strawberries.
Phew! You wouldn't guess I've got the house to decorate and re-furb as well. Good job I'm retired.
All the best and thanks for your encouragement and interest,
JJ